This video focuses on what are regarded as the four major Jungian Archetypes: The Self, the Persona, the Shadow, and the Anima/Animus.
10:01 min
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Joseph Campbell continues exploring C.G. Jung’s idea of the Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious by looking at Jung’s concept of the Shadow - the aspects of one’s personality that one has submerged - and looks at how it serves as a wellspring for dream and myth.
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One question I am often asked is what books to begin reading if one is interested in the Jungian world view. My top recommendations are the books of Robert A. Johnson. They are the most accessible to someone building a Jungian vocabulary.
In this video, I cover some basic tips for starting your dream journal so that you can begin to do a Jungian dream analysis on your dreams. Dreams are the direct expression of unconscious activity in the psyche.
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My particular interest is in the way that dreams show us the patterns which govern the way we relate to others, structure and live our lives, and influence what we believe – what psychotherapy calls our implicit, internal working models.
In this video, I explore Carl Jung's ideas around dream analysis and dream interpretation. Jung was very open and flexible in approaching the mysterious nature of dreams in his psychiatric sessions with patients.
In the second part of our introduction to Jung we examine the individuation process, dream analysis, the persona, the shadow, the anima/animus, and the Self.
In this video we investigate what Carl Jung called archetypes, explaining what they are, how they influence our lives, their relationship to symbols, and their connection to religious experiences.
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A conversation with Jungian analyst James Hollis. “Respect your dreams. Nature doesn’t waste energy. It’s seeking to communicate to us in some way which, if we pay attention, may begin to heal some of the splits that we all carry.” James Hollis, Ph.D.